Is This the Start of a New Crypto Winter for Bitcoin?

Bitcoin closed the week under sustained pressure, trading well below the psychological $80,000 mark after a sharp pullback sent the world’s largest cryptocurrency to levels not seen in months.
The drop has revived discussions around whether the market is entering a deeper corrective phase, especially as on-chain indicators and historical patterns suggest that the current trajectory closely mirrors previous bear-market cycles.
Over the past several days, Bitcoin struggled to reclaim key support levels that typically define healthier bullish structures. One of the most significant losses was the “true market mean” at around $80,700, a threshold that analysts have long viewed as essential for maintaining upward momentum. Traders are also increasingly concerned about the breakdown of the 21-week exponential moving average, an event that has preceded major downturns in past cycles.
The latest crossover between the 21-week and 50-week EMAs, last seen in April 2022, is reinforcing that caution, as that signal historically coincided with the onset of more sustained bearish periods.
Since forming its local high near $90,000, Bitcoin has already fallen by roughly 17 percent. The price action has added weight to warnings from several analysts who argue that the market is once again following the script of earlier bear markets. Even so, the possibility of a short-term rebound has not been fully dismissed. A newly formed gap on the CME Bitcoin futures chart near $84,000 could attract price action in the coming sessions, as such gaps often act as gravitational zones for short-lived reversals. But for now, traders remain wary, noting that temporary rallies have rarely altered the broader trend during comparable phases in previous cycles.
The technical weakness visible on charts is echoed in the latest on-chain data. Bitcoin is currently trading below the realized price of investors who acquired their coins between 12 and 18 months ago. This metric represents the average cost basis at which those coins last moved and often serves as a critical psychological marker. When spot price falls beneath it and stays there, market behavior historically shifts from routine pullbacks into more prolonged and structurally bearish regimes. Researchers observing recent trends warn that the realized price has flattened into a layer of resistance, suggesting that any recovery attempts are likely to be met with selling from investors waiting to exit at break-even levels. Combined with declining profitability and slowing balance growth, the current setup resembles earlier periods that preceded extended downturns.
Crypto Market Under Pressure
While Bitcoin wrestles with technical fragility, the broader crypto ecosystem faces challenges of its own. January recorded an alarming resurgence in hacks, scams, and security failures, with crypto users losing more than $370 million in a single month.
According to data from CertiK, this was the highest monthly loss in nearly a year and almost quadruple the amount stolen in January 2025. What makes the figure even more concerning is that the bulk of these losses came from just one social-engineering scam that drained roughly $284 million from a single victim, highlighting the growing sophistication of targeted attacks.
Phishing schemes dominated the landscape, responsible for more than $311 million in stolen assets. Major incidents throughout the month included a breach of Step Finance, where hackers drained nearly $29 million from treasury wallets, and an exploit on the Truebit protocol that cost over $26 million after a vulnerability allowed near-costless token minting. Other significant attacks targeted platforms such as SwapNet and the Saga blockchain protocol, reinforcing that operational infrastructure remains a prime target for bad actors.
Security analysts warn that, despite technological advancements, the crypto industry continues to struggle with safeguarding its users. Data from TRM Labs shows that illicit crypto transactions hit a record $158 billion in 2025, even as the number of attacks declined. The rise in total losses reflects a shift in criminal strategy: attackers are moving away from purely smart contract vulnerabilities and focusing instead on compromising servers, internal systems, and private keys, areas where breaches often yield much larger rewards. Activity linked to sanctioned regions also surged dramatically, contributing to a growing share of illicit capital flowing through the ecosystem.
Taken together, the market’s technical fragility and the industry’s renewed security concerns paint a cautious picture for the weeks ahead.
Bitcoin may still attempt to recover toward the CME gap near $84,000, but analysts argue that the broader structure suggests a market navigating a correction rather than a brief shakeout.
Meanwhile, the surge in hacks underscores that security remains one of crypto’s most unresolved challenges, reminding users and institutions alike that volatility extends far beyond price charts.




